Reading the book indicates I do read about war. As for Matterhorn, many claim it to be one of the best novels of the Vietnam War to date. It is an outstanding work but only one war book is on my list of Desert Island Books — Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried. As a result, it ranks as my favorite book on any war.

My reading this year also reflects my interest in the topic. One of my favorite books so far this year is Jonathan Littell’s The Kindly Ones, a novel about an SS officer in World War II. Also arguably qualifying is another of this year’s favorite books, Brodeck by Philippe Claudel, a fictional tale arguably set in World War II that explores the effects of a war on a small village. Interestingly, both are translated from French. A third novel I’ve read this year dealing with war was Get Out of the Way by Daniel Dinges, about a young man who, counter-intuitively, enlists to try to avoid Vietnam.

My interest in the subject is sparked by the fact my dad was a World War II veteran, I grew up during the Vietnam War and I’m a history buff. Still, I think the number of war-related books so far this year is somewhat of an aberration as I usually average eight or less a year.

I survived, but it’s not a happy ending. I was a coward. I went to the war.

1 comment to Musing Mondays: War

the more I think about it, there are a number of books I have liked that were set during a war, but I really do not seek out that setting and would not consider myself a war book “fan”.
actually. I am not really a fan of most historical novels… 😉